Penns Valley Community Learning Garden

Penns Valley Community Learning Garden "Growing Food and Medicine, Sharing Skills, Building Community" is the motto and spirit of our not- Donations are used for garden expenses.

To get involved with the Learning Garden, sign up on our email list at our Millheim Farmers Market table, at our weekly work party, or send us an email at learninggardenpv@gmail.com. Let us know if you prefer information only, kids' activities info, or to be a PVLG volunteer--or all three. Working in the garden is our main activity, but we offer many diverse volunteer opportunities. Begun in Spring 2009 by a trio of farmers/gardeners--Brian Burger, Joe Fahy and Warren Leitzel--the Learning Garden is a place where those who know can share their knowledge in gardening technique and related skills in self-reliance. It is also a place where some great food is produced, which is offered at the adjacent Millheim Farmers Market and to the local food bank. Novice gardeners learn by working alongside the experienced. Children and their parents are also welcomed in the children's row and pumpkin patch. Frequent programs are offered on topics such as permaculture/polyculture, composting, worms, scythe uses, insect control, healthy soil, solar cooking, growing season extension, children's garden journaling, seed planting, seed saving and more.

01/28/2021

Cicadas have been feeding underground for 17 years. This year, they'll surface in Michigan and other states. https://bit.ly/3pjwjKN

Every time I provide midwifery care with all of the precautions necessitated by COVID-19, from wearing masks to Zoom con...
04/25/2020

Every time I provide midwifery care with all of the precautions necessitated by COVID-19, from wearing masks to Zoom consult visits, I'm acutely aware of how much this is affecting the my clients and their families as they experience childbearing during a pandemic. Please consider sharing your stories and perspectives.

University of Illinois at Chicago researchers are conducting a survey on how isolation, stress, and changes in healthcare related to COVID-19 affect pregnancy and the postpartum period. If you are currently pregnant or have given birth since January 2020, are at least 18 years old, able to read English and are in the United States, please consider taking our survey.

To participate please click the link below:

(Clicking the link will bring you to a questionnaire, where the first 3 questions will determine if you are eligible to participate.
If you are eligible and consent to participating, you will be asked to answer questions regarding your pregnancy and birth, taking about 15 minutes to complete. The questionnaire will be only be available until July 16.)

If you chose to click on the link, please be aware that social media almost universally collects information about user behavior while on the site, as well as tracking user behavior initiated on the site, presenting issues of privacy and confidentiality.

👉 Survey link:
https://bit.ly/2XKMNka

Please feel free to share the link with anyone you think may be interested. If you have any questions, please Dr. Kylea Liese: kylea3@uic.edu

Yesterday I dug up (divided?) the irises in front of the learning garden sign.  There is one big clump I plan to divide ...
10/27/2019

Yesterday I dug up (divided?) the irises in front of the learning garden sign. There is one big clump I plan to divide further and replant. The rest are looking for a good home. Free for the taking!

A cheerful and productive garden cleanup on a drizzly Sunday.  Many thanks to Patchwork Farm and Greenhouse for the dona...
10/25/2019

A cheerful and productive garden cleanup on a drizzly Sunday. Many thanks to Patchwork Farm and Greenhouse for the donation of beautiful compost and Envinity for the loan of a dump trailer.

Every year I try an "experiment" at the Learning Garden; some are more successful than others.  This year is was an arti...
10/24/2019

Every year I try an "experiment" at the Learning Garden; some are more successful than others. This year is was an artichoke plant. It was big and beautiful but didn't have time to flower. So now I just completed phase 2 of the experiment; can an artichoke be overwintered in Central Pa? Directions online say yes. Here is my step by step photo tutorial. To learn results, stop by the learning garden next May!

10/09/2019

Pennsylvania agricultural industries are facing a mounting threat from the spread of the spotted lanternfly, and Penn State a received $7.3 million federal grant to lead a four-year, multi-institutional research effort aimed at combating the invasive pest.

How did you grow and learn in the garden this year? One Learning Garden member grew sweet potatoes this year!
10/06/2019

How did you grow and learn in the garden this year? One Learning Garden member grew sweet potatoes this year!

10/04/2019

Following two reports of spotted lanternfly sightings, Penn State is asking all football fans to take precaution before traveling to Beaver Stadium this weekend for the Purdue game. The invasive species poses a number of threats to state wildlife and industries.

09/11/2019

Look familiar? That isn’t mud under that playground equipment – those are egg masses! And each one could mean 30-50 more invasive, destructive pests come spring.

If you 👀 one, scrape it!

Learn more: http://bit.ly/2FuHcUo

https://www.facebook.com/377864928989864/posts/1623072944469050?sfns=mo
08/28/2019

https://www.facebook.com/377864928989864/posts/1623072944469050?sfns=mo

Sent to us by a follower.....

You're having a few drinks in the garden with your friends, or a family BBQ, when a load of pesky wasps arrive to spoil the party. You haven't seen them all summer and then suddenly they're all over the place, annoying everybody, causing panic and helicopter hands. Sound familiar?

August is the time of year when people start to ask 'what's the point of wasps?' The answer may surprise you.

Did you know that there are approximately 9,000 species of wasp here in the UK? These include the parasitic wasps, some of which are so diminutive they are like pin heads. Of the 250 larger wasps which have have a stinger, the majority are solitary and cause no upset to humans.

However, when we talk about wasps, we're almost certainly referring to the our nation's nemesis, the Common wasp (Vespula vulgaris). To understand why these wasps become really annoying this time of year, you first need to understand their life cycle.

Common wasps live socially like bees but, unlike honey bees, they haven't evolved a way of storing food to allow the colony to survive the winter. In fact the only survivors are the young, fertilised queens who hibernate over winter. They emerge in the spring to build little walnut sized nests where they they lay around 20 eggs.

The queen feeds the resulting larvae until around May, when they mature and become workers. Then she focuses on more egg-laying and the workers get on with feeding them, enlarging the nest as they go along. By this time of year the nest has grown to around 40cm in diameter, often larger, and that nest can contains up to 10,000 wasps!

Then, in late August and September, a dramatic change takes place. The queen quits her egg laying (save a few that will go on to be future queens and males to fertilise them) and no longer releases the pheromone that causes the workers to work.

Basically, these workers are made redundant, and are left jobless and disorientated. And the problem for us is that, although adult wasps are insect predators, that meat is to feed the larvae not themselves. In their adult state wasps are not able to digest solid food and need sugary liquid to survive. Now, with fewer no larvae to feed, they become uncontrollably and insatiably hungry.

Wasps love easy food such as over ripe fruit and your fizzy drinks. Towards the end of their brief lives, their hunger drives them to search for easy sugar at exactly the time when we are more likely to be using our gardens and outdoor spaces for eating sweet things. The timing couldn't be better for them or worse for us.

So why are those who panic and try to swat them away more likely to be stung than those who remain calm?

Well the problem is that these redundant workers have their own pheromone, which helps protect the nest from attack earlier in the year, and that's essentially a chemical rallying cry to other workers that the nest is under attack.

So when you swat that annoying wasp and it feels under attack, that rallying cry will go out. Suddenly it all kicks off, and loads more wasps will start arriving in aggressive 'red-mist' mode, fired up and ready to defend their nest. This is why the best advice is to stay calm.

Think of it this way, from May that wasp has been working its socks off helping to keep things nice on planet earth. Now it’s going to die. So why not give it a break, save your swats, put a bowl of sugary drink somewhere out of your way, and let it go out on a nice sugar rush :-) At the very least don't kill it.

What's the point of wasps? Without them it’s likely that human life would not survive because, in the absence of their role as predators, our planet would be overrun by even more damaging insects such as aphids, ants and caterpillars.

Please feel free to share with others x

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Millheim, PA

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